One thing to note here,,, (& i`ve said this to many people over the last few decades)
The cranks usually have shims fitted in behind the crank gear to space them out to line up with the cam gear,,, well,,, as things go, heaps of people don`t remove them if/when having their cranks hardened & of course what happens???,,,, yes that`s right, the shims end up being hardened & turn particularly brittle,,, BUT!!! those same people don`t realise what they have done,,, they leave the brittle shims in place & fit up the engine components, tighten the grank gear & harmonic balancer etc & drive off "Thinking" they have a wonderful new engine
well,,,, it`s only a matter of time & the shims break up & fall out & whoops!!!! suddenly the front pulley is loose
yeah???
got it???
Ok,,, so an easy trick here is to "NOT" use the shims to space out the crank gear,,, but insted to use a suitably worn cam thrust plate & then trim (Machine) the cam gear shoulder down to suit --> to aligne the cam gear with the (now non-shimed) crank gear
Just a thought for all you budding young engine builders out there
& i hope i havn`t made many of you nervouse about your crank gear shims breaking up & falling out,,, (now imagining many of you wondering if you left the shims in place & are now rushing out & checking how tight your front pulleys are)
anyways,,, there you go